The man in the second photo is the film criitc Roger Ebert (www.rogerebert.com). He has been a friend and supporter of Werner Herzog's for many years, so he probably took these photos during an interview with Kinski.

Deno op 25/05/2014

You should toss stuff like this Kathie's way now and then. Now that she need to praorgm four Premieres each month, she's got her work cut out for her.

Sai op 25/05/2014

I thought the film was wdnuerfol. It brought to life real people who had lived at a time when seas were 300 lower and people could walk from Germany to Britain. I was rivetted. I have always loved the neolithic and would have liked to have lived at that time. The paintings evoked an era when humans identified as part of the local ecology which included impressive megafauna, some of which were depicted in the cave cave lions, cave bears, wooly rhinos, mastadons. The scientists interpreting the paintings and the times went into the weaponry used for hunting. These neolithic people were tall and amazingly fit and strong to be able to live in the extreme cold and to hunt and live among these huge creatures. The paintings depict the non-humans as real personalities. It makes me sick that Australia is developing all her aboriginal peoples so that they will no longer have a choice of that other lifestyle, which still carries valuable information about a wdnuerfolly healthy way of relating to nature and to each other.I hope I won't offend by saying that race or species in zoology just means a discreet population that breeds within itself for whatever reason. Could be because there is a sea separating that population from others, or other obstacles. Could be different habits, such as nocturnal vs diurnal. But the range of genetic attributes is thus limited so one population might have hairy noses and another might have smooth skin. In Virolution Frank Ryan finds that different populations of animals establish alliances with viral dna and when a member of another population comes into their territory they are likely to succumb to the virus where the local tribe has immunity. Tribes or species are organised according to territory and humans tend to identify themselves with tribal dress etc. Whilst avoiding incest with close family members through exogamy, they still tend to marry within their tribe (endogamy), which has the effect of keeping land within the same families and clans and, incidentally, the range of DNA. A nation of citizens has the same principle; those inhabiting a certain territory are members of a tribe which has rights to self-government. If a population were to avoid breeding out for long enough then you would get such distinct species that there could be no interbreeding, but that is the extreme end of race' or species'. Species means kind' as in different kinds.' The Australian Aborigines are thought to have crossed over Gondwanaland between 60 and 40,000 years ago, more or less direct from Africa. The oldest neolithic art in Cave of Lost Dreams was dated round 34,000 year ago. Until British settlement in Australia the populations there were all still practising neolithic lifestyles and showed no immediate interest in beeds and baubles; they seemed to have too much self-respect and to be self-sufficient without notions of individual wealth.

Genilson op 27/10/2015

That's a no-brainer. They need to get the plans together and those plans will lekily cost well in excess of $2MM, so it isn't like they are going to pay for those until they know what sort of funding they have available.Even if they go underground for clubhouses and facilities, that doesn't address what they do about batting cages and other facilities. I think they are going to have to utilize some of the triangle space for that sort of thing. Or, perhaps after they move the locker rooms under the field, they'll move the batting cages to where the former locker rooms are.In any event, with a finite blueprint, it will be really interesting to see how the Cubs renovate. And, fans should realize that a ton of money is going to be dropped on engineering the solution, especially if they go underground. IOW, I don't think fans are going to think the return was worth $500MM because it wouldn't surprise me to see over $100MM of that money simply spent in fortifying the foundation of the park if they go subterranean with the improvements.